But I set fire to the rain
Watched it pour as I touched your face
Well, it burned while I cried
‘Cause I heard it screaming out your name,
Your name
– Set Fire to the Rain, Adele
Thursday, April 6, 2006
Morgan Penthouse: Living Room
Jason scowled at the tax paperwork and flipped over a form for what must have been the third time that morning. He’d always been able to focus—always been able to shove out everything else in his brain to concentrate on what was in front of him but lately—
But not today. Less than a month ago, his life had been under control. Sure, Sam was struggling with Danny’s death and looking for her birth mother, but that was a problem Jason could solve. He could be there for her, find the answers—
And then that had blown up in his face. He knew he never should have run the test behind Sam’s back, and in hindsight, asking Elizabeth, in particular, had been a mistake. He’d never gotten in the habit of thinking of her like an ex-girlfriend, but everyone else had.
It just felt like he’d never been able to get back on the right foot with Sam. Fighting about the test, about Alexis and Elizabeth—everything had been going wrong even before she’d decided to get back into cons. And then Emily—
Jason scrubbed a hand over his face, took a deep breath. None of that mattered. He just had to get things under control. Lucky would go back to work at the end of the week, and Elizabeth would be fine. She and Lucky always managed to work things out.
Jason knew that better than anyone. The last few weeks—the last few days—had just been…they’d just drifted towards each other the way they always did when things got tough. It didn’t mean anything.
It couldn’t mean anything.
He was grateful when the knock on the door came. Jason shoved himself away from the desk and crossed to the door, frowning when he saw Beto on the other side. He jerked the door open. “What are you doing here? You’re supposed to be on Manny—”
“I wanted to tell you in person—we lost him.” Beto shook his head. “He went to the motel last night like always, but he never came out this morning. I called Vic—Manny isn’t at the hospital either. He didn’t show for his shift.”
Jason grimaced and rubbed the back of his neck. This was the last thing he needed. “Everything okay at the hospital?”
“Vic said things were good on his floor. Manny hasn’t been there much in the last few weeks. Never bothered Emily at all.”
Jason frowned, turned back to him. “What about ICU? Did Vic go to the sixth floor?”
“He went up there, but Manny wasn’t there either—” Beto hesitated. “This is good, right? He probably split after Alcazar and his lady.”
Probably, but it just—it felt too easy. Jason rubbed his chest absently, frowning. He could call Elizabeth, he could ask her—
But she’d asked him to stay away, and judging by the look on Lucky’s face, the last thing Jason wanted to do was make more trouble for her. He never should have gone to the apartment the night before.
He pulled out his cell phone and called Cody instead. “Hey. You got eyes on Elizabeth? She’s okay?”
“She’s good, Jase,” Cody answered. “We’re at the hospital, up in ICU. Just like always. Why?”
“Beto said Manny checked out of the motel at some point and never showed for work. Don’t—” Jason hesitated. “Don’t tell Elizabeth. We don’t know anything yet, and I don’t want to worry her. Just—just don’t let her out of your sight.”
“Got it, Jase. Nothing will happen to her on my watch.”
Jason stared at his phone for another long moment, wondering if he was making the right choice not telling Elizabeth Manny had disappeared.
“What do you want me to do? Should I go tell Mr. C?”
Jason blinked, looked up at Beto. “No, uh, I’ll do that. Ah—” He frowned. “We need to find Manny, but I want someone else at the hospital. Vic should stay on the fifth floor, but I want someone walking around on six. In case Manny makes a grab at Elizabeth—”
“Might be hard—that’s the ICU, and you need special permission to get around.”
Which meant Jason had to call Alan and ask for another favor. His father might agree—he hated Manny Ruiz, too. “I’ll take care of it. Just head over. Stick with Cody if nothing else.” He sighed. “I’ll contact Alcazar. Put him on alert.”
Beto raised his brows. “We’re…helping him?”
Jason glared at the guard. “If Manny goes after anyone else, it’ll be Skye. Alcazar should know Manny has disappeared. He can take care of Miami. And if Manny shows up down there, I want to know.” This was the problem of thinking in black and white, of always taking things personally. Alcazar had been a threat while looking for control in Port Charles, but in Miami, they’d need to work with him once in a while.
“Right, right. I’ll get moving. Maybe it’s over?” Beto suggested as Jason walked him to the door. “Wouldn’t it be great if it ended like this?”
“I don’t think we’re going to get that lucky,” Jason muttered. He closed the door, then leaned his forehead against it for a moment. He needed to call Sonny, put the organization on alert. Everyone needed to be looking for Manny.
He opened his phone again, intending to call Sonny but it rang before he could. He stared at the screen for a long moment when he saw Sam’s name scroll across, wondering if he should just let it go to voicemail.
And then he felt guilty for that, so he flipped open the phone and answered it. “Hey, Sam. What’s up?”
“Is this a bad time?” Sam asked. “You sound like you’re in a hurry.”
“I’m in the middle of a couple of things,” Jason bit out, but then took a deep breath. “I’m sorry. It’s fine. How’s it going down there?”
“I can call back—”
Jason clenched his jaw, then forced himself to stop being so damn annoyed. It wasn’t Sam’s fault she’d called at a bad time. Nothing that had happened was her fault.
“It’s fine,” he repeated. “How’s Florida?”
“Do you really want to know?” Sam asked after a long moment. “I know you were mad—”
“I really want to know,” Jason told her. “I was going to call—” He winced because that might be the first time he’d actually lied to her. “I didn’t think you’d want to hear from me.”
“I wasn’t sure I did,” she admitted. “But I didn’t want you to worry. Look—” She was quiet for a moment. “I know you don’t like what I’m doing. I know you have issues. But I need you to know that—God, Jason, this has been amazing. I forgot the rush. The thrill. You know what I mean. You know that’s what you like about your job.”
His stomach sank as he closed his eyes. “Yeah. Yeah, I know.”
“It’s never boring, and I didn’t even realize how bored I was. I ran the game with Paulie yesterday, and we’re running another one in a few hours. It’s just—he offered me a regular gig. A few times a year. Just doing the same thing.”
Jason scrubbed a hand over his face. Great. Just what he needed. “So, you’d keep going.”
“Yeah, but just this. Just the real estate, you know? I don’t want—I’m not going back to all the old games. I can’t run them if we’re together—”
“And how long before you get bored with just the real estate?”
Sam was quiet. “There are a lot of things I can do that have nothing to do with the trophy wife or mistress, Jason. Can’t you trust me to find a way to make this work for us?”
He realized that she’d sounded almost happy when he’d answered the phone—lighter than she had in weeks—he realized it now because her tone shifted. Dulled. He closed his eyes again.
What right did he have to judge her for finding her own way out of the depression she’d sunk in after her brother’s death? Sam had done nothing wrong in the last few weeks—nothing to deserve the way he’d been treating her.
He didn’t know what was going wrong, didn’t understand how it had started or why it always seemed to get worse. Sam hadn’t changed. He hadn’t changed.
Nothing had changed—not really. He knew why Elizabeth had left him. That was all. Nothing earth-shattering about any of it.
“I don’t know,” Jason said, finally, because he didn’t want to lie to her again. “But I’m willing to try.”
She took a deep breath. “That’s all I’m asking. I’ll be home on Saturday. We’ll—we’ll make this work—and this—we can just go back to how it used to be. That’s what you want, isn’t it?”
“Yeah,” Jason said faintly. “That’s what I want.”
“I’ll see you on Saturday.” Sam paused. “I love you.”
“I love you, too.” He hung up the phone, then stared at it for a long moment. For the first time since he’d said those words to her a year earlier—
They felt like a lie, and he didn’t understand it.
He didn’t understand what had changed for him in the last month. He didn’t know how to explain why just being in the same room with Elizabeth, knowing that he’d broken her heart—that it had been his to break seemed to rip apart everything else.
He’d been with her the night before—sitting on the sofa, Cameron between them listening to the toddler talk about his toys in a mixture of toddler-speak and English. He’d caught Elizabeth’s eye a few times as they’d enjoyed Cameron and his enthusiasm.
Are you sorry…that it’s not her in this penthouse? That you didn’t marry her? Have a kid with her? Are you sorry that it’s me and not her standing in front of you?
He hadn’t been able to answer Sam when she’d asked him that question, but she’d shoved that thought in his head—
And for a moment—just a moment—last night, sitting on that sofa—
He’d wanted Cameron to be his—to have put that ring on Elizabeth’s finger—
He’d wanted that life to be his.
Jason exhaled slowly and opened his phone again to call Sonny. It was useless thinking of things that could never happen.
It didn’t matter what had or hadn’t happened four years ago. It didn’t change anything, and there was no point in pretending things could be different. She was right.
They couldn’t be friends anymore. He needed to get rid of Manny Ruiz, make sure Elizabeth and her son were safe—
And then get out of her life.
Kelly’s: Courtyard
“We’ll just grab something to go,” Emily told Sonny as they walked into the courtyard. “I know you want to get back to Greystone in case something happens.”
Sonny frowned at her, stopping a few feet from the door. “What do you mean?”
Emily blinked. “I just—I talked to the guard on my floor earlier, Sonny. Vic, right? He told me Manny didn’t show up for work. He said Jason didn’t want Elizabeth to know, but I don’t have a guard, so he thought I should.” She furrowed her brow. “You do want to get back to Greystone for that, right? Isn’t that what you meant when you said you didn’t have a lot of time?”
“Yeah, but I wasn’t going to get into it,” Sonny said with a scowl. “And Vic shouldn’t tell you anything. I’ll talk to him. Jason doesn’t want Elizabeth to know anything because there’s no point. That’s why we gave her a guard.”
Emily pursed her lips, frowning. “No point? She might be in danger—”
“Emily—”
They both turned when the door swung open, and the woman in question stopped out. Elizabeth raised her brows, her hand wrapped around a to-go cup. “Am I interrupting?”
“No,” Emily said. She took a deep breath. She and Elizabeth hadn’t spoken in a few days—not since their blow up at Kelly’s. And because she had a bad feeling, she lifted her chin. “Did you see Manny at the hospital today?”
“Oh.” Elizabeth shook her head. “No. But he’s not always assigned to my floor.” She sighed. “Not that it seemed to matter, but—” She tilted her head to the side. “Why? What’s wrong?”
“Emily,” Sonny said with a shake of his head. “Let’s go inside—”
“Stop,” Emily said, slapping his hand as he tried to take her arm. “Stop it. She deserves to know. I don’t care if Jason doesn’t want to worry her.”
“Deserves to know what?” Elizabeth demanded. She stepped forward. “What’s going on—”
“Nothing,” Sonny began but was startled when Elizabeth shot him a nasty look. “What—”
“I get it, I’m not your problem. You made that loud and clear,” Elizabeth retorted. She took a deep breath, looked at Emily. “Em—”
“Manny’s missing,” Emily declared. “He didn’t show up to work, and he left the motel. Vic—the guy on Pediatrics? He said they’re trying to find him, but they don’t know where he is.”
Elizabeth’s face paled as she closed her eyes, took a deep breath. “And no one thought I should know.”
“What difference does it make if you know?” Sonny asked. “Your guard knows—”
“I might not have stopped for coffee—” Elizabeth pursed her lips. Shook her head. “Some things will never change,” she murmured. “I’m going home. Thanks, Emily.”
“Of course.” Emily offered her a smile. “I’m sure it’s fine. You know, he probably went after Skye, you know. Dad said she moved to Miami with Alcazar.”
“Does everyone know everything?” Sonny muttered.
“I’m sure that’s true,” Elizabeth said, “and Cameron hasn’t been feeling well, so maybe Jason didn’t think—” She shook her head. “It doesn’t matter. Good night.”
“Good night—”
“Elizabeth,” Sonny said as she passed them. Elizabeth sighed, then turned back to face her. “Look, I’m sorry. I know—I know you wanted something done a while ago about Manny. I told Jason it wasn’t our problem.”
“You what—” Emily’s words sputtered as Sonny continued speaking.
“But I changed my mind. As soon as Manny made his first threat—and you’ve had Cody for almost a week—”
Elizabeth just stared at him for a long moment. “You changed your mind.” Her voice sounded a bit rusty as if she were forcing the words out. “When?”
“When?” Sonny repeated, then frowned. “Why does—” He nodded. “Yesterday,” he said finally. “Anything before then—that’s on Jason.”
Elizabeth stared at him for a long moment as Emily frowned. Why did it matter when Sonny had changed his mind? When Jason had given Elizabeth a personal guard?
But Elizabeth didn’t say anything to answer that question. She just nodded. “Okay. I need to go home.” She left then, and Emily blinked after her, before looking at Sonny with confusion.
“What was that about? What did she mean you told Jason it wasn’t your problem? What’s not your problem—”
Sonny exhaled slowly. “I’m not getting into it right now, Emily—”
“Oh, don’t even try it—” She flattened her hand against his chest, looked at him, trying to understand what was going on. “You didn’t want me to know what was going on. You didn’t want her to know. You weren’t even going to help her with Manny.”
And how had Emily not known Elizabeth was struggling with Manny for so long?
I’m drowning. And you don’t see it. And I don’t ask you for help. Because I know I can’t go to you. You won’t be there.
Emily swallowed hard. “Why weren’t you going to help Elizabeth? How long has this been going on?”
Sonny grimaced, looked away. “Emily—”
“She’s my best friend, Sonny. And she’s hurting. I need to know—” Emily took a deep breath. “I need to understand why. Please.”
“Since before you and Jason had the fight—” Sonny admitted.
“That’s—Sonny, that’s like three weeks.” And she hadn’t seen it. God, Elizabeth was right. Emily hadn’t noticed a psychopath was going after her best friend. “And you weren’t going to help her? Why?”
“She’s married to a cop—”
“She’s Elizabeth,” Emily said flatly. “She’s always defended you. Always looked out for you and Jason. And you were going to let her twist in the wind because she married Lucky? She didn’t ask Lucky for help. She asked you—”
“She asked Jason,” Sonny retorted. “And I told him it wasn’t our problem.”
“But he didn’t listen.” Emily exhaled. “He gave her a guard—”
“Eventually. After Elizabeth made it clear she wasn’t going to let it go. This is why I don’t want you to know anything. Because you see what happens?” Sonny demanded. “Elizabeth thinks she knows so much better than everyone else—she put herself in danger—”
“What—”
“She was trying to help Skye, but she doesn’t understand this world. And neither do you if you think I’m going to talk about it with you—”
“This world,” Emily repeated. “Manny’s a psycho who already tried to kill my brother—who might be trying to kill my best friend—and you think that I shouldn’t—” Her stomach rolled, a sick, twisting, almost sour feeling settling in. “He’s been watching her,” she murmured. “For months.”
Sonny frowned. “What—No—that’s not—”
“We both used to work on the Pediatrics floor. We saw him all the time. That’s why I called Jason.” Emily took a deep breath. “Before the quarantine.” Before things had changed between her and Sonny. “But after—after he put the men at the hospital, I didn’t see Manny a lot. I thought it meant it was safe.”
Sonny frowned. “But Elizabeth saw him all the time—Jason told me—”
“She moved floors. She got promoted and went to the sixth floor. And kept seeing him. Because he followed her there.” Emily scowled. “If you’d just told me she was in trouble, maybe I could have seen it earlier. I could have told you that Manny is never on my floor anymore. But, apparently, he’s always on hers. And Skye isn’t someone who comes to the hospital a lot.”
Sonny swallowed hard. “So, he didn’t get the job trying to get to Skye.”
“No. No, he didn’t.” Emily’s eyes burned. “I missed it. I would have seen it, but I ignored her for you. She told me—”
I’m drowning.
What else had she missed?
“But you should have told me,” Emily said. She jabbed a finger at him. “You should have told me Elizabeth was in trouble. You knew three weeks ago, and you said nothing.”
“You know how this works—”
“Bullshit,” Emily spat. “This is not a movie, Sonny. You are not Michael Corleone, and I’m not the kind of woman you can lie to and shut out. Not when people I love are in danger.” This—this is what Jason had meant when he’d told her she’d get hurt.
Because Sonny didn’t see her as a partner, as an equal. “You didn’t even want Elizabeth to know Manny was missing—”
“Neither did Jason—”
“No—” Emily shook her head. “No! That’s not the same. It’s not. He was trying to protect her, to keep her safe. You just didn’t want me to know, you didn’t want her to know. Because it’s not her business. Why? You had no problem using her to get information about Manny—”
“I wasn’t using her—” Sonny scowled. “That wasn’t me. That was Jason.” He grimaced. “He always tells her more than she needs to know—”
She lifted her chin. “Maybe that’s because he trusts her.”
Sonny hesitated, then nodded. “Yeah, he does.” He shook his head. “And maybe she’s earned it over the years in some ways—”
“I could have earned it, too. But you’re not even going to let me try.” She waited for him to deny it, but he just stared at her for a long time.
“Emily,” Sonny said, almost painfully. “It’s complicated more than that—”
“It’s really not. Someone I loved was in danger, and you shut me out to the point that it’s made everything worse.” Emily stepped back from him, seeing him more clearly now than she had in months. “I need to go.”
“Emily—”
She turned and walked back towards the parking lot.
And didn’t look back.
Lucky & Elizabeth’s Apartment: Living Room
Elizabeth hesitated when she pushed open the door and found Lucky sitting on the sofa inside. She sighed, set her purse down next to the door where she could grab it in a hurry, then returned her attention to the cell phone at her ear.
“Thanks, Bobbie. No, it’s really fine. I’m glad Cam’s having so much fun—No, I can come get him later.”
She hung up the phone and tucked it into her purse, then turned her attention to Lucky, who kept staring straight ahead at the television. She stared at him for a long moment before walking into the kitchen.
She should say something to him—they should, at least, talk about what had happened over the last forty-eight hours—
But Elizabeth was just tired.
She hadn’t told Lucky that Manny Ruiz had talked to her or that one of Jason’s guys was following her around, so she could hardly tell him now that Manny had disappeared—
She wished Jason had told her, but he was doing what she’d asked. Staying away. Keeping his distance. Cody was with her, and she knew she was relatively safe but—
Dealing with her marriage was just not something Elizabeth wanted to do tonight. She opened the freezer to take out a tray of ice cubes. When the Manny situation was sorted out, she and Lucky would deal with all of this—
She sighed, closed the freezer without the tray. She was just putting it off. Just—ignoring it. What would change if Manny was found in two days? Tomorrow?
Nothing. Lucky would have still—
She looked down at her wrist, gingerly pushing the sleeve to look at the angry marks on the underside of her arm. She touched them lightly with her other hand, then pulled down the sleeve.
Waiting wouldn’t make it go away. Wouldn’t make it not be true.
Lucky might not have punched her. Might not have slapped her—
But he’d hurt her. He’d put his hands on her, intending to inflict pain, and that was always going to be true.
She went back into the living room towards the doorway, not even realizing why until she was standing next to her purse, the doorknob within reach—
“We should talk,” Elizabeth said. Lucky blinked at her, turning to look at her. He stood, his face lined with exhaustion, his eyes bloodshot as if he hadn’t slept.
“I’m sorry,” he said.
“For what exactly?” Elizabeth asked, with an arch of her brow. She gestured at her temple, where the bruise was still a harsh, angry purple at her hairline. “For this?” She shoved her sweater sleeve up. “What about for this?” she asked, revealing the angry purple fingerprints on her arm. She needed to hear him say it, to admit it.
“For all of it,” he said hoarsely. He raised his eyes from her arm to meet her eyes. “I’m ashamed. I’m no better than my father.”
“Your father?” Elizabeth repeated, taken aback by that. She hadn’t expected— “What—”
“I’m no better than Tom Baker. Or Connor Bishop.”
“No, that’s—” Some of her anger eased. “You’re not—you’re not a rapist, Lucky. But you need—you need to get yourself together. I have a little boy to raise—”
Lucky frowned at her. “What does that have to do with anything? I didn’t hit Cameron—I didn’t even hit you. Not really—” He scowled. “Are you telling people I hit you? Because I didn’t—”
Elizabeth pressed her lips together and fought back an angry response. It wasn’t worth the energy to argue over whether or not he technically hit her. She didn’t understand—he’d already admitted what he’d done was terrible—why did it matter what words she used? “I didn’t tell anyone—”
“I just—I lost my temper.” Lucky took a deep breath, and some of the angry red flush faded. “You just—I told you to stay away from Jason Morgan, and there he was again, in my face—in my house, with my wife—”
Elizabeth frowned and shook her head. Not this again. “I told you, he just wanted to check on Cameron. He’s always liked kids—”
“Well, he’s not going to like yours. Where the hell is Cameron? What, did you let Jason babysit?”
She couldn’t track the conversation, couldn’t predict what he’d say next or how he’d react to anything she’d say—His hands were shaking as he drove them through his hair. “Lucky, have you been drinking or something? You’re not making any sense—”
“Oh, because I don’t want my wife fucking a criminal, I’m the crazy one?” Lucky demanded as he stepped towards her.
“What are you talking about?” Elizabeth threw up her hands, her patience completely gone. “I just—you’re not acting like yourself—”
“I’m fucking tired! I’ve been in pain for six months, I’ve been killing myself in therapy and at work trying to keep my life from falling apart. You’re off gallivanting with criminals, letting them fucking buy you stuff! What the hell do you expect?” His nostrils flared. “And you didn’t tell me where Cameron is. Is he with Jason?”
“He’s with Bobbie, I told— I was on the phone with her when I came home—she was babysitting Morgan, and Cam’s having a good time—”
“Morgan? Sonny fucking Corinthos’s kid?”
“And Bobbie’s grandson—”
Why was she arguing with him? Why hadn’t she just picked up her purse and made that exit—
Because he might not let me leave.
Was she fast enough? Could she get the door open before he could grab her—
Oh. God.
“Lucky—”
“That fucking kid is not going to take after his whore of a mother and hang out with fucking criminals—”
Lucky started for the door, shoving Elizabeth to one side as he reached for the doorknob. Panicked now, Elizabeth grabbed at his arm, tugging him backward.
She couldn’t let him go, couldn’t let him go after her little boy—It didn’t matter what he did to her—she had to protect Cameron—
Lucky whirled around, grabbed both of her wrists, and shook her. He jerked her back and forth so hard she felt like her teeth rattled.
“Why do you keep making me do this?” he screamed at her, his eyes bulging, his face flushed. “Why do you keep making me so fucking mad? I asked you for one thing! One thing!”
“Let me go—” she tried to choke out the words, her heart pounding so hard in her chest she thought it might burst. “Lucky, you’re hurting me—”
He let her go abruptly, flinging her away from him with a violent shove. Elizabeth went flying backward into the end table, crashing into a heavy lamp that shattered on the floor. The table collapsed, and her shoulder slammed against the sofa before she finally hit the ground
She laid there for a moment, trying to understand—trying to think—her shoulder was screaming—her wrists were on fire—her cheek was throbbing—how—
Then she heard the door slam.
Elizabeth shook her head, trying to clear it, trying to turn it to the side to look—Lucky was gone.
Oh, God. Oh, God.
He was going to Bobbie’s.
Comments
I hope Liz does something real soon before Lucky goes to Bobby for Cam and he does something to him. I wish Manny can damage or kill Lucky so Liz can be free from him.
I don’t care if Elizabeth calls Cody, Jason, Piph or the national guard, she can’t let Lucky go to Bobbie’s and hurt or scare Cam. At this point, she has to realize she is being abused and get the heck out. Good chapter and look forward to the next.
Like in real life some women just won’t leave a abusive relationship. they just keep making excuses. Great chapter
Elizabeth better leave Lucky after this she can make excuses in her head about how Lucky been treating her but now she sees he about to go after her son no more she need to leave his ass. Nice to see the rose cover glasses is coming of Emily when it come to Sonny and what going on around her.
I love this story. I can’t wait for Friday !!
Great update. What are the chances that her bodyguard is around somewhere? If not, here’s hoping that Lucky meets up with Manny on his way to Bobby’s. Well, looks like Auntie Em is finally waking up; hopefully it’s not too late. Looking forward to your updates. Thank you for sharing.
I hope Elizabeth wakes up before Lucky hurts Cam and Elizabeth worst. I hope Elizabeth calls Bobby to warn her to get Cam and Morgan out of there. Maybe Emily will become the friend Elizabeth needs.
Whoa, what a chapter. The break down of three couples. Sam realizing she wants that old life, the thrill. Does she really want Jason and does he want her. I think you just woke Emily up and opened her eyes. She actually see Sonny for who he is and what she has become. Thank you allowing Elizabeth to wake up to the truth, Lucky is an abuser. If she doesn’t get out, either Cam or herself will pay the price. What a way to come full circle. Thank you
Love this story. I can’t wait until Friday, Jason has to get there in time to say Liz and Cam.